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David.WE.Roberts 26-10-2013 02:53 PM

Black or othe colour plastic to cover ground
 
I'm going to try a deliberate (rather than involuntary) no dig policy this
winter on the allotment.

I need some opaque plastic sheets to cover the ground.

I do have some black and some blue DPC membrane for putting in foundations.

Will this be O.K. or do I need something gardening specific?

Equally, if I don't have enough then this plastic is cheap as chips from
Builders Merchants.

Cheers

Dave R

Baz[_3_] 26-10-2013 04:28 PM

Black or othe colour plastic to cover ground
 
"David.WE.Roberts" wrote in
:

I'm going to try a deliberate (rather than involuntary) no dig policy
this winter on the allotment.

I need some opaque plastic sheets to cover the ground.

I do have some black and some blue DPC membrane for putting in
foundations.


I think that black DPC membrane would be better because it lets no light in
and helps warm up the ground. I don't know the science of it, but black
absorbs light, or is it heat? Or both?
I have seen many allotmenteers us it on parts that have weeds, and I am
going to do the same next week for my next years potato plot after a layer
of rotted manure has been laid on the top of the soil.

Will this be O.K. or do I need something gardening specific?


One snag is that your soil is going to be on the dry side when you lift the
covers off. Would it be a good idea to water first? I don't know. I am
going to suck it and see. (no pun)

Equally, if I don't have enough then this plastic is cheap as chips
from Builders Merchants.


Correct. Builders Merchants are one of the gardeners best friend,
financialy.

Cheers

Dave R


We should compare notes next spring, Dave.

Best wishes
Baz

Janet 26-10-2013 05:35 PM

Black or othe colour plastic to cover ground
 
In article , says...

I'm going to try a deliberate (rather than involuntary) no dig policy this
winter on the allotment.

I need some opaque plastic sheets to cover the ground.

I do have some black and some blue DPC membrane for putting in foundations.

Will this be O.K. or do I need something gardening specific?

Equally, if I don't have enough then this plastic is cheap as chips from
Builders Merchants.


Not too cheap; the wind can shred light plastic.
Last year I used an ancient HD tarp we used to use on woodstacks;
it's got holes and is no longer waterproof but good enough for weed
suppression. Held down with bricks and scaffold poles. In spring the
clean soft ready soil was a joy to behold.

You may be able to get hold of battered old discarded tarps free from
a local builder, haulier etc.

Janet


David.WE.Roberts 27-10-2013 11:25 AM

Black or othe colour plastic to cover ground
 
On Sat, 26 Oct 2013 15:28:55 +0000, Baz wrote:

"David.WE.Roberts" wrote in
:

I'm going to try a deliberate (rather than involuntary) no dig policy
this winter on the allotment.

I need some opaque plastic sheets to cover the ground.

I do have some black and some blue DPC membrane for putting in
foundations.


I think that black DPC membrane would be better because it lets no light
in and helps warm up the ground. I don't know the science of it, but
black absorbs light, or is it heat? Or both?
I have seen many allotmenteers us it on parts that have weeds, and I am
going to do the same next week for my next years potato plot after a
layer of rotted manure has been laid on the top of the soil.

Will this be O.K. or do I need something gardening specific?


One snag is that your soil is going to be on the dry side when you lift
the covers off. Would it be a good idea to water first? I don't know. I
am going to suck it and see. (no pun)

snip

Have you seen the forecast? :-(

Not much point in watering a swamp, IMHO.

Good general point, though :-)

Cheers

Dave R

David Hill 27-10-2013 02:01 PM

Black or othe colour plastic to cover ground
 
On 27/10/2013 11:25, David.WE.Roberts wrote:
On Sat, 26 Oct 2013 15:28:55 +0000, Baz wrote:

"David.WE.Roberts" wrote in
:

I'm going to try a deliberate (rather than involuntary) no dig policy
this winter on the allotment.

I need some opaque plastic sheets to cover the ground.

I do have some black and some blue DPC membrane for putting in
foundations.


I think that black DPC membrane would be better because it lets no light
in and helps warm up the ground. I don't know the science of it, but
black absorbs light, or is it heat? Or both?
I have seen many allotmenteers us it on parts that have weeds, and I am
going to do the same next week for my next years potato plot after a
layer of rotted manure has been laid on the top of the soil.

Will this be O.K. or do I need something gardening specific?


One snag is that your soil is going to be on the dry side when you lift
the covers off. Would it be a good idea to water first? I don't know. I
am going to suck it and see. (no pun)

snip

Have you seen the forecast? :-(

Not much point in watering a swamp, IMHO.

Good general point, though :-)

Cheers

Dave R

If you cut the polythene into bed sized strips then there should be
enough migration of the water from the sides If you cover the whole plot
with one sheet then I'd put something under it to raise it a few inches
every 6ft , weigh it down between and use a garden fork to make holes
through it to let the water through. If you have the whole plot covered,
who is going to get all your run off? will they be happy with that?
David @ a blustery side of Swansea Bay
They're surfing in this part of the world as well
http://www.gowerlive.co.uk/webcams/langland-webcam

bert 27-10-2013 08:36 PM

Black or othe colour plastic to cover ground
 
In message , Baz
writes
"David.WE.Roberts" wrote in
:

I'm going to try a deliberate (rather than involuntary) no dig policy
this winter on the allotment.

I need some opaque plastic sheets to cover the ground.

I do have some black and some blue DPC membrane for putting in
foundations.


I think that black DPC membrane would be better because it lets no light in
and helps warm up the ground. I don't know the science of it, but black
absorbs light, or is it heat? Or both?
I have seen many allotmenteers us it on parts that have weeds, and I am
going to do the same next week for my next years potato plot after a layer
of rotted manure has been laid on the top of the soil.

Will this be O.K. or do I need something gardening specific?


One snag is that your soil is going to be on the dry side when you lift the
covers off. Would it be a good idea to water first? I don't know. I am
going to suck it and see. (no pun)

Equally, if I don't have enough then this plastic is cheap as chips
from Builders Merchants.


Correct. Builders Merchants are one of the gardeners best friend,
financialy.

Cheers

Dave R


We should compare notes next spring, Dave.

Best wishes
Baz

Agricultural Suppliers are also pretty good. Silage sheets are huge and
cheap.
--
bert


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